Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BHALCHANDRA alias BAPU & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/04/1968
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1968 AIR 1319 1968 SCR (3) 766
CITATOR INFO :
R 1972 SC1150 (8)
D 1972 SC1485 (5)
ACT:
Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860) ss. 304A and 337--Storage of
explosives of higher degree--Explosion--Whether licensees
liable criminally.
HEADNOTE:
In an explosion which took place, the persons who were
working in the factory of the appellants where crackers were
being manufactured died or were injured. The appellants
were convicted under ss. 304A and 337 I.P.C. In appeal to
this Court, the appellants contended that criminal liability
could not be imposed upon them under ss. 304A and 337 as it
had not been established that the deaths or injuries caused
were the direct result of any rash or negligent act on the
part of the appellants or that any such act had been proved
which was the proximate and efficient cause of the explosion
without the intervention of another’s negligence.
HELD: The appellants were rightly convicted. [773 C]
Although there was no direct evidence of the immediate cause
of the explosion but the explosives the possession of which
was prohibited under the notifications issued under the
Indian Explosives Act were found in the shops or the
premises where the appellants carried on their business and
the substances which were of highly hazardous and dangerous
nature were apparently being used in the manufacture of the
fire works. since they were found at the scene of the
explosion. These explosives had sensitive composition and
even friction or percussion could cause explosion. In the
factory itself where the explosion took place the persons
who were employed were mostly women who brought their small
children with them and young children below the age of 18
had been employed in the manufacture of fire works. It
became therefore, all the more incumbent on all appellants
to have completely avoided the use of highly sensitive
compositions. The appellants had, undoubtedly displayed a
high degree of negligence by allowing or causing to be used
dangerous and prohibited compositions and substances which
must be held to have been the efficient cause of the
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explosion. [771 A-C; 773 C]
Rustom Sharior Irani v. State of Maharashtra. Cr. A. No.
72/65; Balachandra Waman Pathe v. The State of Maharashtra,
Cr. A. 62 of 1965 decided on 20-11-1967. followed.
Regina v. David Dant., 169 English Reports (C.C.) 1517; Rex
v. Pittwood. (1902) 19 T.L.R. 37, applied.
Kurban Hussein Mohammedali Rangwalla v. State of
Maharashtra, [1965] 2 S.C.R. 622; Suleman Rahiman Mulani &
Another v. The State of Maharashtra Cr. A. 50 of 1965
decided on 1-12-1967, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 193 of
1965.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
October 19, 1965 of the Bombay High Court in Criminal Revi-
sion Applications Nos. 193 and 194 of 1965.
767
K. Hingorani and N. H. Hingorani, for the appellants.
P. K. Chatterjee and S. P. Nayyar, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Grover, J. This is an appeal by special leave in which the
main question for decision is whether the appellants were
rightly convicted for offences under ss. 304A and 337 of the
Indian Penal Code.
The facts lie within a narrow compass. The appellants held
licences under the Indian Explosives Act 1884, hereinafter
called the Act, and the Rules framed thereunder to
manufacture, possess and sell fire works and gun-powder not
exceeding 200 pounds and to possess and sell safety fuses.
It appears that the appellants had a factory for
manufacturing explosives in a house on Shad Road in Latur
town. It is said that an explosion occurred in that place
on May 5, 1962 at about 12 O’clock as a result of which 11
persons died and 7 persons were injured. The appellants
along with one B. G. Kamble were tried for offences under
the various provisions of the Act and the Rules as also for
offences under ss. 304A and 337 of the Code. The trial
judge acquitted B. G. Kamble but convicted the appellants of
the various charges framed against them and imposed fine for
offences under the provisions of the Act and awarded a
sentence of one year under S. 304A and three months under S.
337 of the Indian Penal Code with a direction that they were
to run concurrently. The learned Additional Sessions Judge
dismissed the appeal preferred by the appellants against
their conviction and sentence. The appellants then moved
the High Court on the revisional side. The order of
conviction was confirmed by the High Court as also the
sentence on all the counts except that under s. 304A the
substantive sentence was reduced to one of rigorous
imprisonment for six months but for the reasons mentioned in
the judgment of the High Court the appellants were directed,
in addition, to pay a line of Rs. 1,500 each.
Now there can be no manner of doubt and it has been so found
that in the explosion which took place the persons who were
working in the so called factory of the appellants where
crackers etc. were being manufactured died or were injured.
According to the courts below the appellants had, in their
possession, unauthorised explosives in contravention of the
Act and the rules and had committed a number of breaches of
those rules and the conditions of the licences issued to
them. The principal contention on behalf of the appellants
is that even on the facts found it is not possible to hold
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that they were responsible for the explosion or had done
anything which could be regarded as a direct and immediate
cause of the explosion. Thus criminal
768
liability could not be imposed on them under ss. 304A and
337 of the Code as it has not been established that the
deaths or injuries caused were the direct result of any rash
or negligent act on the part of the appellants or that any
such act had been proved which was the proximate and
efficient cause of the explosion without the intervention of
another’s negligence. In the High Court emphasis was laid
on the absence of any positive evidence pointing to the
presence of the appellants at the material time. The High
Court while holding that there was no direct evidence in
respect of the immediate cause of the explosion referred to
the conclusion of the courts below that the appellants had
committed a number of hazardous breaches of the rules framed
under the Act and the conditions of the licences issued to
them, particularly the storage of prohibited explosives and
employment of children below the, age of 18. This, it was
pointed out, showed a callous disregard for the safety of
the employees. It was noticed that the Assistant Inspector
of. Explosives had also attributed the explosion to the
storage of prohibited explosives of a high degree.
Therefore the appellants were found to have been rightly
convicted under ss. 304A and 337 of the Indian Penal Code.
Our attention has been invited by the learned Counsel for
the appellants to certain decisions of this Court. In
Kurban Hussein Mohammedali Rangwalla v. State of
Maharashtra(1) a factory was licensed on certain conditions
to manufacture paints. The manager and the working partner
did not have a license for manufacturing wet paints but
nevertheless the factory manufactured them. Certain burners
were used for the purpose of melting rosin or bitumen by
heating them in barrels and adding turpentine thereto after
the temperature cooled down to a certain degree. While this
process was going on froth overflowed out of the barrel and
because of heat, varnish and turpentine which were stored at
a short distance caught fire and resulted in the death of
seven persons working in the factory. The question was
whether the manager and the working partner of the firm
which ran the factory was guilty under ss. 304-A and 285 of
the Indian Penal Code. It was held that the mere fact that
the burners were allowed to be used in the same room in
which varnish and turpentine were stored even though it
might be a negligent act would not be enough to make the
appellant before this Court responsible for the fire which
broke out. The cause of the fire, it was observed, was not
merely the presence of burners in the room in which the
varnish and turpentine were stored though this circumstance
was indirectly responsible for the fire which broke out.
The requirement of s. 304A was the causing of death by doing
any rash or negligent act and this meant that the death must
be the direct or proximate result of the rash or negligent
(1) [1965] 2 S. C. R. 622.
769
act. It was found that the direct or proximate cause of the
fire which resulted in seven deaths was the act of a
labourer who acted in a hurry and who did not wait until the
bitumen or rosin cooled down and thus it was his negligence
which was the direct and proximate cause of the fire
breaking out. The appellant, namely, the manager and the
working partner of the firm could not be held to have
committed the offence under S. 304A of the’ Code.
The ratio of the above decision was applied in Suleman
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Rahiman Mulani & Another V. The State of Maharashtra(1). In
that case the question was whether the first appellant who
had only a learner’s licence and was driving a jeep which
knocked down the deceased had been rightly convicted of an
offence under S. 304A of the Code read with certain
provisions of the Motor Vehicles Act. On the material on
the record the court found it impossible to discover under
what circumstances the accident had taken place. This Court
held that it was not known what was the proximate cause of
the accident and the possibility that it had been caused due
to the fault of the deceased could not be ruled out. The
mere fact that the appellant in question held a learner’s
licence did not establish that he did not know driving. His
proficiency might furnish a defence which the learner could
not have but the absence of proficiency did not make him
guilty. His conviction under s. 304A was therefore set
aside.
The facts of the present case are somewhat different and
distinguishable from those of the above two cases as will be
clear from a close examination of the material evidence
relating to the substances which were being used in the
manufacture of the fire works etc. in the factory of the
appellants.
It appears that soon after the explosion the Inspector of
Explosives, West Circle, Bombay, proceeded to Latur for
investigation. He took into possession certain substances
from the scene of the accident. By means of a letter, dated
May 11, 1962 sent from the office of the Inspector of
Explosives these substances were forwarded to the Chemical
Examiner, Government of Maharashtra for examination, the
samples were as follows:-
1. A white substance in a packet suspected
to be potassium chlorate.
2. An orange yellow substance suspected to
be arsenic sulphide.
3. A round stone piece containing smears
with orange yellow chemical adhering to it.
(This was to
(1) Cr. A. 50 of 1965, decided on 1-12-67.
770
be examined for the presence of arsenic
sulphide and potassium chlorate).
4. A contraption to test the explosibility
of a mixture of potassium chlorate and
sulphur.
Dindeshchandra P. W. 10 Assistant Inspector of
Explosives also went to the scene of the
explosion along with the Inspector on May 9,
1962 and various samples were collected from
the shops of the appellants as well. All
these were forwarded to the Chemical Examiner
for examination. The report of the Chemical
Examiner (Ex. 87) which is to be found on the
original record gives the following analysis
in respect of the above substances "Exhibit
(1) is potassium chlorate.
Exhibit (2) is arsenic sulphide.
Exhibit (3) has sediment containing arsenic
sulphide and sulphur adhering to it.
Exhibit (4) has Potassium Chlorate and Sulphur
in its cavity."
"Apart from the original record these facts
stand established from the evidence of
Dindeshchandra P. W. 10 and the report (Ex.
38) --which he had submitted on November 2,
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1962 which was duly proved by him when he
appeared as a witness. He has further stated
that when he inspected the premises of the
factory on May 9, 1962 he noticed half burnt
raw material like sulphur white powder the
ingredients of which he could not ascertain.
There were grinding stones as also empty tubes
for manufacturing exhibition fire works. As
regards the cause of the explosion his opinion
may be given in his own words --
"Probable cause of the explosion must have
been the large quantities of the raw materials
gun powder and finished fireworks and the raw
materials for the same were stored in the
premises. At the time of the explosion there
were large quantities of the fireworks,
finished as well as in the process of
preparation, loose compositions and the gun-
powder. There were being dried in the open
court yard of the premises. Some of the items
contained very sensitive explosive
compositions which might have exploded due to
the spark, percussion or friction or fire."
Although there was no direct evidence of the immediate cause
of the explosion but indisputably the explosives the
possession of which was prohibited under the notifications
issued under the Act -were found in the shops or the
premises where the appellants carried on their business and
on the substances that have been :,mentioned which were of a
highly hazardous and dangerous
771,
nature were apparently being used in the manufacture of the
fire works since they were found at the scene of the
explosion, (vide the evidence mentioned before and the
finding of the trial court and the Additional Sessions
Judge). As stated by Dindeshchandra P. W. 10 these
explosives had sensitive compositions and even friction or
percussion could cause explosion. It is further proved that
in the factory itself where the explosion took place the
persons who were employed were mostly women who brought
their small children with _them and young __children below
the age of 18 had been employed in the manufacture of the
fire works etc. The factory was situate in close proximity
to residential quarters. It became therefore all the more
incumbent on the appellants to,, have completely avoided the
use of highly sensitive compositions of the nature mentioned
above.
The decision which is apposite to the present case is the
one recently delivered by this Court on April 3, 1968 in
Rustom Sherior Irani v. State of Maharashtra(1). There the
chimney of a bakery had collapsed and 11 persons were killed
and certain persons were injured. The appellant had
submitted no plan for the alteration of the chimney for the
third time and had asked just a mason to remove the iron
pipe which had corroded and to bring the height of the
chimney to 65 feet. The mason had told Mm that while the
work was being executed it was unnecessary to completely
keep the bakery closed except during the period the repair
work was being done. After the chimney fell down a number
of officers visited the spot and inspected the bakery. The
Chief Inspector of Boilers was of the opinion that the cause
of the collapse of the chimney was the explosion which
occurred in it because of the products of combustion and
gases not being permitted to escape freely as a pipe of 6
inches diameter had been put instead of 12 inches diameter.
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It is unnecessary to refer to, the detailed discussion of
the evidence. It was established that the construction of
the new chimney had been done without ther advice of a
properly qualified person. The argument raised was on the
lines similar to the one which had been advanced in Kurban
Hussein Mohammedall Rangwalla v. State of Maharashtra(2).
It was maintained that no negligence on the part of the
appellant had been established and it was on account of the,
negligence of the mason that the chimney had fallen down.
This Court was of the view that the proximate and efficient
cause of the deaths was the negligence of the appellant in
choosing a pipe of 6 inches diameter and asking a mason (who
was apparently not a qualified person) to carry out the
alterations and also continuing working at least one oven
there during the period while the alterations to the chimney
were being made.
(1) Cr. A. No. 72/65. (2) [1965] 2 S. C. R. 622.
772
In another recent decision, Balachandra Waman Pathe v. The
State of Maharashtra,(1) this Court referred with approval
to what was said by Straight, J. in Empress of India v. Indu
Beg(2) that criminal negligence is the gross and culpable
neglect or failure to exercise that reasonable and proper
care and precaution to guard against injury either to the
public generally or to an individual in particular, which
having regard to all the circumstances out of which the
charge has arisen, it was the imperative duty of the accused
person to have adopted. In Queen Empress v. Bhutan(1) the
lessee of a government ferry having the exclusive right of
conveying passengers across a certain river was held to be
guilty under s. 304A when he had committed the negligent act
of putting a boat in the ferry which was in an unsafe condi-
tion and which sunk resulting in some of persons getting
drowned. The Punjab Chief Court found a person guilty under
ss. 304A and 338 in Kamr-ud-din v. King Emperor(4) when he
had consigned two boxes containing fire works to the Railway
falsely declaring them to contain iron locks with the result
that in loading one of the boxes exploded killing one coolie
and injuring another. The inadvertence to the results of
concealing the true character of the contents of the box
which was the failure of duty to the public at large and the
knowledge of the dangerous nature of the contents which must
be inevitably presumed coupled with the consequences were
regarded as constituting a complete offence under the
sections.
Adverting to English law, the case of Regina v. David
Dant(5) is highly instructive. This is what Erle, C.J.
observed
"The defendant turned a dangerous animal on to
a common where there was a public footpath.
This has been found by the jury to be culpable
negligence, and the child’s death was caused
by it. Ordinarily speaking these are all’ the
requisites of manslaughter. It is. contended,
however, that no offence was committed, be-
cause as we must take it, the child was not on
the path. the jury having found that it was
very near, but that they could not say whether
it was on or off. In my opinion the defendant
is responsible for having brought so great a
danger on persons exercising their right to
cross the common; and it is not a ground of
acquittal that the child had strayed from the
path."
In another case, Rex v. Pittwood(6) the prisoner was charged
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with manslaughter on the ground that he had been negligent
in not
(1) Cr. A. 62 of 1965 decided on 20-11-67.
(2) 1. L. R. III All. 776.
(3) 1. L. R. XVI All. 472.
(4) 1905 P. R. 22. (Cr.)
(5) 169 English Reports (C. C. ) 1517.
(6) (1902) 19 T. L. R. 37.
773
closing a gate when a train passed which it was his duty to
do with the result that White who was in a hay cart was
killed while the cart was struck by the train which came
when it was crossing the line. Wright, J. was of the
opinion that the prisoner had been guilty of gross and
criminal negligence as he was paid to keep the gate shut
when the train came and protect the public. It was a clear
case of misfeasance as the prisoner directly contributed to
the accident and he was guilty of manslaughter.
All the above cases show that criminal negligence can be
found on varying sets of circumstances. The tests which
have been applied appear to be fully applicable to the facts
of the present case including the one of direct and
efficient cause. The appellants had, undoubtedly displayed
a high degree of negligence by allowing or causing to be
used dangerous and prohibited compositions and substances
which must be held to have been the efficient cause of the
explosion.
The appellants were therefore rightly convicted and
sentenced under ss. 304A and 337 of the Indian’ Penal Code.
As no other point has been pressed or arises for
consideration, the appeal is dismissed. The appellants
shall forthwith surrender to their bail bonds.
Y.P. Appeal dismissed.
774